Phone a Friend over Wi-Fi

Phone a Friend over Wi-Fi

If you are interested in trying out Vonage, the F1000 is a great way to go – assuming you have a Wi-Fi network in your house. Just turn on the phone and register it with your wireless network. The phone will connect to Vonage, download the latest version of its firmware, and be ready to use within a few minutes.

Vonage has two residential plans: the Basic 500 gives you 500 minutes per month to call anywhere in the U.S., Canada, or Puerto Rico for $14.99 per month; additional minutes are 3.9 cents each. The company’s $24.99 per month Premium Plan gives unlimited calling within the same area. Both plans allow unlimited incoming calls and unlimited calls to any other Vonage phone. And Vonage has rock-bottom rates to elsewhere in the world – like 4 cents per minute to the United Kingdom, 10 cents per minute to South Africa, and 70 cents per minute to Afghanistan.

But what I really like about Vonage is the company’s extra services. You can call in for your voice-mail messages or get them delivered by e-mail. You can set your phone number to call-forward to any number in the world. You can even set up multiple phone numbers that ring simultaneously when someone dials your Vonage number. I moved to Vonage two years ago. When somebody dials my number, it rings my home, my cell phone, and my desk phone at Harvard. And when I pick up one phone the others automatically stop ringing.

Ironically, the F1000 falls down when it comes to working with the local wireless network. The phone has a wireless scanner and supports both 802.11 WEP and WPA encryption systems, so you can set it up with most home or corporate wireless networks. Unfortunately, the phone needs to be rebooted every time someone changes the configuration of the network, which makes managing the phone a real pain.

A related and even more serious problem is that the F1000 doesn’t have a built-in Web browser. This means that you can’t use the F1000 with any wireless network that requires you to type in a username, password, and credit-card number – which rules out T-Mobile’s HotSpot network, AT&T’s 802.11 wireless network, the Surf and Sip wireless network, and many more. Even many airports that offer free wireless service still require that users click a web button labeled “I agree” to accept the network’s terms and conditions. Alas, with the F1000 there is no way to agree.

So consumers shouldn’t count on a Wi-Fi phone like the Vonage F1000 to fill all the roles of a cell phone. But in some scenarios, Wi-Fi phones may be ideal – for example, as the main phone for the college student on a budget. Many university networks allow students and faculty to register their wireless devices using the device’s MAC (media access control) address, eliminating the need for a Web browser, username, or password. Then, for just $14.99 per month, the student gets a phone that can receive unlimited calls anywhere on campus and place calls to anywhere in the world at dirt cheap rates. Although it probably won’t work off campus, at least the voice messages can be delivered by e-mail.

Expect to see these next-generation cordless phones showing up in more pockets – and continuing to disrupt the old telephone companies’ business models.